The above Royal Mail Plants stamps were issued on 19 May 2009 by Royal Mail and feature the following stamp designs:
1st Round-headed Leek; 1st Floating Water-plantain; 1st Lady's Slipper Orchid; 1st Dwarf Milkwort; 1st Marsh Saxifrage; 1st Downy Woundwort; 1st Upright Spurge; 1st Sea Knotgrass; 1st Deptford Pink. The Special Handstamp first day cover with the
Tallents House
Special Handstamp
postmark
has been produced by Royal Mail/Post Office
and features these stamps which can make a very collectible and lovely gift.

Royal Mail provided background information for this issue

click on titles to view details.

Reason and inspiration

Often overlooked, plants are at the base of the food chain and without them no other life forms
could exist. However agricultural practices, urbanisation, and pollution have taken their toll, and
now almost two in every five wild plants in the UK are of conservation concern.

Despite their threatened status, the ten plants selected for inclusion in this stamp series
represent a degree of recent conservation success.

The Plants stamp issue celebrates the vital part flora plays in our planet’s bio-diversity and is
the third in Royal Mail’s Action for Species series, which looks at the UK’s endangered flora and
fauna. The first in the series, Birds, was issued in September 2007, the second, Insects, was
issued in April 2008.

To celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew a Miniature Sheet of
four stamps will be issued on the same date. Kew has a lead role in conserving biodiversity
through its scientific and conservation work.

Stamp design and background

Experts from conservation groups including the Royal Botanic Gardens and the Natural History
Museum were consulted to arrive at a short list of ten endangered plants.

Studio Dempsey was commissioned to produce a block of ten First Class Stamps using examples
of botanical art to display the selected plants.

This is a form of illustration designed to show off all the features of a specimen, often with a
greater level of detail than photography is able to. Some illustrations are from Kew's own
extensive collection of botanical art.

The Miniature Sheet was designed by Kate Stephens and utilises existing photography of some
of Kew’s landmark buildings set against the background of a palm leaf.

Stamp by Stamp - all 1st Class

Round-Headed Leek

(Allium sphaerocephalon) was first discovered in 1847, in the Avon Gorge
near Bristol. It has since been introduced in a very few, scattered locations.
Floating Water-Plantain (Luronium natans) spread eastwards from its core natural habitats in
the lakes of Snowdonia and mid Wales in the 19th century, taking advantage of the canal
network. In recent decades, however, pollution and recreational boating have led to its
disappearance from many lowland waterways.

Ladys Slipper Orchid

(Cypripedium calceolus) has the misfortune to qualify as one of Britain’s
rarest plant, having been reduced in the wild to a single specimen in West Yorkshire. Over-grazing,
and centuries of over-collecting by gardeners and botanists are to blame for its virtual extinction
in Britain.

Dwarf Milkwort

(Polygala amarella), long known from the chalk grasslands of the North Downs
in Kent and the limestone grasslands of Yorkshire, has declined in recent years, particularly in Kent.

Marsh Saxifrage

(Saxifraga hirculus), a rare wild flower of wet moorland and mountain bogs, is
now reduced to a few localities, chiefly in the northern Pennines and north-east Scotland, with
recent losses attributed to land drainage, over-grazing or afforestation.

Downy woundwort

(Stachys germanica) may once have been more widespread, but declined
markedly in the 19th century, and is now confined to a small area of Oxfordshire, where it grows
mostly along the verges of ancient green lanes and wood borders overlying oolitic limestone.

Upright Spurge

(Euphorbia serrulata) is found mostly in a few woodlands in Gloucestershire
and Monmouthshire. Cessation of tree cutting and coppicing, which traditionally created well-lit
clearings, is probably to blame for its decline.

Plymouth Pear

(Pyrus cordata) is a British wild pear that was discovered in 1865 in hedge-banks
outside the city of Plymouth. Today, only a few hundred trees exist, in just seven locations.
Sea Knotgrass (Polygonum maritimum) grows just above the high-tide level in a few places
along the southern coast of England and Ireland. A Mediterranean species on the edge of its
range in southern Britain, it is vulnerable to exceptional tides.

Deptford Pink

(Dianthus armeria) was once widespread, but over the past 60 years it has
suffered one of the most rapid declines of any species in the British flora, as the dry pastures,
field borders and hedgerows it needs have steadily disappeared. It is now restricted to about two
dozen sites in England and Wales.